The mayor of Prague has frozen all contracts signed by the City Police
force and ordered a full investigation after the head of the force was
arrested last week on suspicion of accepting a bribe. Vladimír Kotrouš,
Prague City Police force president, is now in custody after anti-organised
crime taskforce arrested him with a large amount of cash on his person.

Vladimír Kotrouš, photo: Milan Holakovský, ISIFA/VLP
Vladimír Kotrouš had to get used to being on the inside of a police van
on Sunday after being remanded in custody to stand trial on corruption
charges. Mr Kotrouš, in charge of the City Police since 2002, was arrested
in his car on Friday afternoon after police videotaped him receiving a
substantial sum of money which they suspect was a bribe.

Mr Kotrouš was apprehended near the headquarters of a company which
provides the police with towing services, fuelling speculation that the
alleged bribe was for awarding the contract to the company. However Pavel
Hanták, spokesman for the elite anti-organised crime unit in charge of the
case, told Czech Television he was unable to comment on the claims for risk
of jeopardising the investigation:

“All I can tell you at the moment is that the money seized was in Czech
crowns, and that it was not a small amount of money – i.e. we are not
just talking about a couple of thousand or something. As to claims that
this money is somehow connected to the contract for towing services –
I’m afraid I’m unable to comment on any concrete allegations at this
point in time.”

Vladimír Kotrouš could face up to 12 years in prison if found guilty;
the case is likely to go to trial sometime in the spring. It would be the
highest profile corruption case involving a serving police officer in Czech
history.

Mr Kotrouš’s boss, Prague Mayor Bohuslav Svoboda, has suspended him and
also moved him to a different department until the criminal case is
resolved. Mayor Svoboda has also ordered all contracts signed by the City
Police to be frozen and investigated. Under local law all contracts over
two million crowns - that’s just over 100,000 dollars – must be subject
to a public tender, but anything under that amount can be awarded at the
police’s discretion. The City Police have so far signed 30 such contracts
in 2011 – including the purchase of pistols and mini-cameras. All are now
likely to be closely scrutinised.

The City Police Hummer, photo: archive of the City Police
The City Police under Mr Kotrouš has been the subject of criticism and
even ridicule for its lavish equipment; it owns two Hummer vehicles, more
commonly used by the U.S. Army in Iraq and Afghanistan, and also a powerful
motorboat which has got its hull wet just once – during the 2002 floods.